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SSNCI Conference

Just a quick note on some upcoming events involving our members;

The Society for the Study of Nineteenth Century Ireland (SSNCI) are hosting their annual conference in Queen’s University, Belfast on 26-27 June 2014. The theme will be ‘Irish Urban Spaces in the nineteenth century’ with Plenary Speakers Prof Roey Sweet and Prof David Dickson lined up to contribute. A call for papers has been released and a deadline of March 14,

2014, stands. We welcome papers to speak to this theme; you can see the call for papers at SSNCI 2014 CFP.

Proposals, including an abstract of the paper and a brief curriculum vitae should be sent to urbanspaces@qub.ac.uk.

‘Twenty Years a-growing: an international conference on the history of Irish childhood from the medieval to the modern age’ is being held in St. Patrick’s College, Drumcondra, Dublin, 9-10 June 2014. The network are hoping to create a database on for the study of Irish childhood and would welcome contributions from people researching in the area. Click here for further details.

As part of the conference, they are compiling a database of sources for the study of the history of childhood in Ireland. They would be grateful if you would contribute details of any sources, primary and secondary, that you have found useful, such as manuscripts, printed publications, photographic collections, ephemera etc.

RESOURCES FOR THE STUDY OF POVERTY AND PUBLIC HEALTH IN IRELAND

Note: This list is by no means exhaustive and we are only at the beginning of compiling relevant resources for those interested in researching the history of poverty and public health on the island of Ireland. If you have any suggestions or would like to add anything to the list please email Georgina Laragy at g.laragy@qub.ac.uk.

Please check back as we update our website and this resource list.

Archives

PRONI, Belfast

Public Record Office of Northern Ireland holds a huge amount of public and private documents that relate mainly to Ireland from the early seventeenth century to the present day. These include a variety of sources on poverty, the poor, medical care and the sick.

National Archives of Ireland, Dublin

National Archives of Ireland contains a wealth of material both locally and centrally generated that includes themes relevant to this project, and those interested in social and political history more generally.

The Linen Hall Library is Belfast’s oldest library dating back to the end of the eighteenth century. It contains manuscript and genealogical source material in its Local Studies Collection.

Sources

Census of Ireland, 1901 and 1911

By locating on the townland in which your local workhouse was located, you can find the census returns from that workhouse. Use the Ordnance Survey of Ireland to discover the townland (see link below). Note: for the most part, the names of people were not given, only their initials. This tended to be the case in all institutions including prisons, workhouses, lunatic asylums and hospitals.

JSTOR Irish Collection

Title list for all journals and publications in their Irish Collection. This contains journals published in various disciplines including history, archaeology, literature, mathematics, biology and many more.

Images of the Irish Famine from Queen’s University, School of English.

National Photographic Archive

Held in the National Library of Ireland in Dublin this archive contains a wealth of visual imagery from the nineteenth century up to the present day. It hosts a digital photograph database available online.